One of the most hilarious things to me is Americans whacking other countries for being corrupt. Russia is a favorite target, but the US abuses virtually every non-Western country for “corruption.” I’ve pointed out before that this is absurd. There is no more corrupt country in the world than the US. The bank bailouts were [...]

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“Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again: “The House of Representatives is out to destroy the American Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Professional. Republicans passed H.R. 6429 with the oxymoron title, STEM Jobs Act of 2012. STEM stands for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics and this bill gives 55,000 foreigners a year who graduate from an American university with a Masters or PhD in these fields an employment sponsored green card. ” They’d rather have guest workers rather than Americans in jobs.

Avedon, thank you so much for being one of the first bloggers on the left who even acknowledges that there are about 100,000 unemployed, highly trained STEM professionals who are out of work right now. I have been trying to get through to some of thick skulls on our side of the aisle for almost 4 years now and they have either been in denial or lifted their snooty liberal noses in the air because they don’t like what we do for a living, i.e. save their asses with our research.

But it’s not the Green Card holders I’m worried about. It’s the people who come here on HIB visas who can only work here as long as their companies sponsor them. I have known people who worked in research for years who couldn’t get a green card. Once their companies laid them off, they had to go back to their country of origin even if they had settled down and bought houses and had excellent work records. Even *with* a green card, a researcher is at risk of being sent home if the green card is narrowly restricted. For example, a green card holder might be able to get one to work only in the particular position for which they were hired. If their company lays them off, they have to find a similar position or they can’t work in this country. They can’t just become a greeter at Walmart. If they can’t find an almost identical job within a certain period of time, they have to start the application process all over again, which means going back home, going on parole, all kinds of unpleasant and economically disastrous things.

By the way, here is a word of warning to the visa holders out there who applied for a green card years ago but whose company bureaucracy seems to be sitting on the application. If you can’t get them to move on your application it’s probably because the company isn’t planning to keep your site open. But they can’t come right out and say that because that might induce panic at the site. So, instead, your application sits in no-man’s land. They’re planning to milk you for all you’re worth and then lay you off. What happens to you after that is YOUR problem. Get your affairs in order and don’t buy that house.

I don’t know whether Congress is going to fix this. You’re absolutely right that we don’t need to further cripple the ability of American STEM workers to find jobs. Right now, there isn’t a shortage. Nope, not even a little bit. We are fairly bursting at the seams with over educated, technically proficient STEM professionals who are all dressed up with no place to go. The companies whine about a skills gap that is non-existent. What I and my fellow unemployed STEM professionals have found is that these companies want a person straight out of school with 25 years of experience. In other words, they desperately need experienced people but they have no intention of paying for it. So, they are assuming that cheap foreign grad students will be able to pick up the slack and if it doesn’t work out, well, it’s only a green card. Let them try to find work at another company. That will keep them from getting notions of dignity above their station. Right? You know I am.

But here’s the thing, Avedon. I know many, many foreign researchers who come here, get a Green Card and as quickly as possible, convert that to citizenship, which is how it should work. We should welcome the people who intend to stay. Then, they become ferocious tiger parents and their kids graduate at the top of their classes. But those kids are just as likely to go compete for jobs – on Wall Street.

Yep. In fact, those Chinese, Indian and Russian graduate students in molecular biology and physics could be the brand new recruits for Goldman Sachs. It’s not unheard of. I know several people who decided that research was unrewarding and economically unstable. No one appreciates what we do. They decided to leave science to get into hedge funds. And their kids are going to go where the money is. I already know many Asian parents who are steering their children in that direction. The “Jahb creators” might think of them stereotypically as hard working, no drama Chinese (they greatly underestimate them) but they are not naive pushovers.

And why shouldn’t Lloyd Blankfein replace his little group of overpaid WASPs to work the front office when he’ll have more than enough brilliant, aggressive recruits who not only speak perfectly unaccented English but a fair bit of Mandarin too? Talk about asymmetric information, you have no idea how much you’re missing until you’re surrounded by the Chinese underground every day.

So, while I’m not happy about this bill, because the premise upon which it is built, that we need more STEM workers, is absolutely not true. But if they’re coming, I’d rather give them a green card with zero restrictions than a visa. And then, I’m just going to sit back and watch them take over the world.

Bwahahahahahahhhhhh!

As for the Congresspeople and Senators who voted for this stupid bill that will keep many Americans, including naturalized Asian American researchers, out of work permanently, I think we STEM workers should compile a list of names. Maybe some of us should run against you or at least point our fingers in your direction and proclaim loudly to everyone we know and our children that you put us out of work and killed American science by giving in to the greedy lobbyists who have no appreciation for what it means to do actual research.

17 Responses

The bill has not been voted on but has a sponsor, Lamar Smith of Texas, and 68 co-sponsors. The co-sponsors are listed on Thomas (thomas.loc.gov) The loc stands for “library of congress.”

None of the sponsors or co-sponsors are from New Jersey and all but one is a Republican. The lone “Democrat” is Representative Henry Cuellar of Texas.

One of the co-sponsors was elected to the US Senate (Jeff Flake of Arizona) and one was elected Governor of Indiana (Mike Pence. Five are retiring at the end of this session but are sticking it to American workers on their way out (David Dreier, Elton Gallegly, Wally Herger, Tim Johnson, Sue Myrick). Ann Marie Buerkle (NY), Dan Lungren (CA), lost in the general election to Democrats and Don Manzullo (IL) lost a primary to another Republican incumbent.

The rest are still around in the House.

Btw, two Republicans quit today to take higher paying jobs in the lobbying/propaganda industry (House member Jo Ann Emerson will run the Rural Electrification lobby) and Senator Jim DeMint (Heritage Foundation).

Well, I doubt that they’re afraid of Obama so it must be the incoming Democrats that are making them squeemish. Of course, the Democrats have let us down in the past but I’m betting that the proposed changes to the filibuster rule has them thinking that being pain in the ass obstructionists is going to be a bit more obvious next term.

Indeed…but it’s not just Repugs sadly. My Dem mayor is about get busy. We were told to expect unpaid “furloughs” , that is, lock outs of a week here a week there…never a string long enough for unemployment to kick in of course. How do you explain ” furloughs” to the gas company

FYI, the number of L-1 visa holders in the USA is estimated to be about six or seven times the number of H-1B’s.

From NAFTA we got TN Visas which are unlimited “professional” Visas from Mexico and Canada…and yeah, they only work for Canadian and Mexican professionals, every US job seeker in Canada must prove that nobody in Canada wants the job…good luck with that.

Then there’s is the endemic age discrimination in hi-tech, legalized by the Supremes re-writing congressional law into unenforceable gibberish.

They told me the radiation treatments would make me tired. They did. On the last day, they said, "It'll get worse before it gets better." They were right, but they didn't tell me how much worse. It's like my entire body is in open rebellion. Also, alien skin. Yikes. I really gotta post these links before it's suddenly September. […]